© Bruce Kekule / brucekekule.com
Species of the Day: Dhole
The Dhole, Cuon alpinus, is listed as ‘Endangered’ on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species™. This large, social canid, also called the Asiatic Wild Dog, once ranged throughout the Indian subcontinent, north into Korea, China and eastern Russia, and south through Malaysia and Indonesia, reaching as far as Java. However, its current range is greatly reduced and highly fragmented.
Geographical range There are estimated to be fewer than 2,500 Dholes left in the wild. While hunting the species www.iucnredlist.org is legally prohibited, Dholes are viewed as a menace to humans and their livestock, so are www.canids.org persecuted by trapping, shooting, and poisoning. The most prominent threats facing the Help Save Species species are the widespread loss of habitat and the depletion of its main prey base (deer) due www.arkive.org to excessive hunting.
Dholes have been reported to occur in a number of protected areas throughout their disjunct distribution. The Dhole Conservation Project is working to gather more data on the species’ distribution and population status. Additional work is needed to understand the potential threat posed by domestic or feral dogs as vectors of pathogens and disease.
The production of the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species™ is made possible through the IUCN Red List Partnership: Species of the Day IUCN (including the Species Survival Commission), BirdLife is sponsored by International, Conservation International, NatureServe and Zoological Society of London.